Colorado State Capitol security entrance on Feb. 7, 2018. A bill is in the works to allow the pubic to buy a badge that would allow them to bypass security checkpoints at the north and south entrances of the Capitol. The cost is $250.

Colorado lawmakers want to create an express lane in the state Capitol for those who can pay.

The aim is to alleviate lines created by enhanced security measures this session, but the $250 price tag is prompting concerns that it grants certain people — particularly lobbyists — special access to the statehouse.

“It’s very much like an express lane on the roads,” said state Rep. Dave Williams, a Colorado Springs Republican and bill sponsor. “You can use it if you are willing to pay for it. But if not, you can … go through the process as it is now.”

The legislation would allow anyone to pay the fee and submit fingerprints for a background check to obtain an identification card that allows entry to the Capitol and legislative buildings without going through a security screening.

Senate president Kevin Grantham, R-Cañon City, supports the measure, but it is expected to face opposition in the Democratic-led House, where leaders point to the Colorado State Patrol’s problems with the bill.

“I don’t agree with the idea of giving preferential access to this place, in particular, to folks who can pay several hundred dollars, which is a sum of money that is not easy for a lot of folks to come up with,” said Rep. Mike Weissman, D-Aurora.

“It’s not really a lobbyist bill, it’s for anybody,” said Sen. John Cooke, a Greeley Republican and former Weld County sheriff who is the lead sponsor.

“People that have business here — the public — should have access,” he added. “This is the people’s building, so we should make it as easy as possible for people to come here.”

But the bill’s sponsors acknowledge that the hefty fee — which could rise to as much as $500 — is intended to restrict the pass to those who most often visit the building, such as lobbyists and citizen activists.

Right now, lawmakers, legislative staff, state employees and reporters with offices in the Capitol are able to obtain identification cards to bypass the metal detectors — installed in 2007 after an armed man entered the Capitol and was shot dead outside then-Gov. Bill Ritter’s office.

The State Patrol, which conducts the security screening at the Capitol and legislative buildings, recently began to require people to remove their belts. The lines to proceed through the security checkpoints at the two public entrances also can grow long with schoolchildren visiting the Capitol for field trips.

Trooper Josh Lewis, a State Patrol spokesman, expressed concern that the bill “may limit our ability to provide a safe and secure environment for all persons entering the Capitol complex.”

“As we have seen in the past, it only takes one individual with violent intent to endanger the safety and security of our Capitol,” he said in a statement. “While we are aware that these protocols may momentarily delay a person’s ability to enter the building, the Colorado State Patrol is committed to the safety of legislators, staff members and the public.”

The security issues are echoed by state lawmakers. Sen. Cheri Jahn, a Wheat Ridge independent who caucuses with Democrats, wants to see a background check for pass holders more frequently than every two years, as the bill states. “I don’t think that’s probably a really good idea,” she said.

The pass is only available to those without a felony conviction, and the clerks in each chamber and the State Patrol may deny cards to those who are considered a safety threat.

But Rep. Tracy Kraft-Tharp, an Arvada Democrat and former lobbyist, said if security concerns are addressed, she supports it.

“It’s a hassle for the people who come here,” she said of the current procedures.

The other problem, she added, is “now we have all these men walking around without belts. There are men who are not wearing their belts because they have to come in and out all the time.”

A Democratic state representative from Greeley who was facing a possible recall and resigned abruptly because of a criminal investigation has been ticketed for providing alcohol to a person younger than 21.

Earlier this week, dozens of Colorado middle school students celebrated the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage by discussing the future of politics with a group of female civic leaders including Denver City Council candidate Candi CdeBaca, Secretary of State Jena Griswold and former state Sen. Polly Baca.